When You Can't Pay Your Life Insurance PremiumUnexpected expenses can catch you short at times. There comes a day when the kids need braces, the car needs a new transmission, the college bills come due or there's a medical emergency. Out-of-the-ordinary expenses can tip the budget out of balance and leave you searching for ways to keep your income and outgo in sync. Then your life insurance premium notice arrives. What do you do? It's good to know the possible consequences of not making a premium payment on your life insurance policy. The effect depends on the type of policy and coverage you have and the policy terms and conditions. With a term policy, if you stop paying premiums, your coverage lapses. With permanent policies, many types of contracts allow you to decide to allocate cash value to pay premiums.1 Depending on the policy and amount of cash value, the result could be a significant reduction in cash value over time, decrease in death benefit and, finally, policy lapse. Note: Some policies are designed with flexible premiums, so that policyowners have the option to pay more or less than the recommended premium or to skip premiums from time to time. Even with these policies, however, policyowners should check with their agents before suspending premium payments for extended periods because there must be enough cash value to pay the monthly charges to prevent a policy lapse.* The biggest concern: If you stop paying premiums and let your policy lapse, you would lose valuable protection, possibly leaving your family at financial risk. Very often, life insurance is the linchpin, the link that can automatically complete your estate if you die prematurely. Death benefit proceeds from a life insurance policy can provide the liquidity to settle final expenses, pay off debts and — at the very minimum — give surviving family members "breathing room" to adjust. 1 Premiums are paid by using non-guaranteed policy values. A reduction in the applicable dividend scale or interest crediting rate for the policy may result in further out-of-pocket cash premium payments being made necessary. * See policy terms and conditions Other concerns: If you want to obtain new coverage later...
Before you decide to skip premiums or let your policy lapse, ask yourself these questions:
This material is being provided for informational purposes only. Neither New York Life nor its agents provide legal, tax or accounting advice. Please contact your own advisors for legal, tax and accounting advice. 2 If you pay your premium other than annually, the total premium you pay each year will be more than the annual premium. This educational third-party article is being provided as a courtesy by New York Life Insurance Company. For more information on this topic, contact me. EOE M/F/D/V |